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Moon7296 Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

What brings you here

1. What brings you here? / Who loves you?

In this types of sentences, there is no do or does like in What does he have for lunch?)

I know the meanings.

I wonder if they are just as they are or there's a rule or gramatical thing.
  

Top answer

moon7296 What brings you here? / Who loves you? In these question the question words replace the noun that we are trying to identify.

  • moon7296 What brings you here?
  • / Who loves you?
  • In these question the question words replace the noun that we are trying to identify.
  • ' is the first noun in the phrase.
  • The bus brings you here.
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2 Answers
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moon7296What brings you here? / Who loves you?
In these question the question words replace the noun that we are trying to identify. The "?' is the first noun in the phrase.

The bus brings you here.
What brings you here?

Mark loves you.
Who loves you?
moon7296What does he have for lunch?
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What brings you here?
What does he have for lunch?


'Do' auxiliary appears when the question word is the object of the sentence; when the question word is the subject, no 'do':

Who do you like?
Who likes you?

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